Sultan Hashim Ahmed

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Lt.-General Sultan Hashim Ahmad Al-Jaburri Tay was the former Defence Minister of Iraq under Saddam Hussein's rule. A close relative of Saddam Hussein, he was appointed to the position in 1995. His daughter was married to Qusay Hussein, the dictator's younger son.

Sultan Hashim Ahmad at Gulf War ceasfire talks, Safwan, Iraq, March 3, 1991 with US interpreter Rick Francona
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Sultan Hashim Ahmad at Gulf War ceasfire talks, Safwan, Iraq, March 3, 1991 with US interpreter Rick Francona

As the invasion of Iraq loomed, it was reported in The Guardian on February 2003 that he had been placed under house arrest by Saddam Hussein, in a move that was apparently designed to prevent a coup. Nevertheless he continued to appear on Iraqi state TV, to preserve a sense of normality.

He was number 27 on the United States' list of most wanted former Iraqi officials. On September 19, 2003, after nearly a week of negotiations, he gave himself up in Mosul and was then granted immunity from prosecution.

He served Saddam during the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War and later in the First Gulf War, signing the cease-fire that ended it. He survived several purges and became the highest-ranking general in the Iraqi army. In 1988, as commander of the Iraq Army's First Corps, he played a direct role in the genocidal Anfal campaign against rural Kurds.

Ahmad's specialty was military intelligence; he graduated from Baghdad's National Security Institute in 1975.

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His daughter was not married to Saddam's son. Qusai Hussien was married to daughter of another general Maher Abdul Rashid Alnasiri.

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